This is meant for summer, but unlike the extremely interesting and well-made Light Blue Pour Homme Sun (2019), doesn't explicitly scream "summertime" and really doesn't communicate anything, nor will really stand out anymore. Clinical oceanic freshness that lasts all day but surprisingly doesn't boom from skin is what you get here, making Light Blue Eau Intense Pour Homme the safe choice for the boyfriend who doesn't like "wearing cologne". An "amberwood" accord which is definitely that scratchy ambroxide/norlimbanol combo made famous by Dior Sauvage (2015) comprises the base, but rounded with white laundry musk and shined with Iso E Super into a less-jarring warmth. This marine accord existed in the original Light Blue Pour Homme, but it was never the focus, and here it rules with an iron fist without any herbal accompaniment. Alberto Morillas does so here, placing a chilled grapefruit with tart mandarin front and center, then leads into a simple heart of "salted" dihydromyrcenol and juniper. I'm not the biggest fan of "frozen" citrus notes, and it's a trick designers seemingly lifted from Avon of all places, as they started putting menthol and/or camphor in several of their early 2000's aquatics like Peak Zone (2002) to be a little different from the Nautica (1992) and Polo Sport (1992) clones that littered the market up until that point. ![]() Considering how "light" the original was, this "Eau Intense" is more like "Eau Normale" or what the original should have been. Morillas seemingly did the least bit possible to intensify the original Light Blue Pour Homme he composed into something only a bit stronger. Suffice it to say I find this flanker acceptable, but not in the least bit interesting, which is slightly more than what I thought of the original Light Blue Pour Homme (2007), but not enough for me to wear or recommend. In other words: This kind of fragrance is really hard to screw up so the challenge is to bring something unique to the table, but asking a designer to take risks with a staple line in a staple genre is like asking McDonald's to take risks with their Big Mac. This isn't to say Light Blue Eau Intense Pour Homme isn't competent, since if nothing else, Alberto Morillas is a master of delivering exactly what is asked of his clients, but competence in the field of fresh masculine aquatics isn't a high mark since they're so narrowly-defined. HYDROXYISOHEXYL 4-CYCLOHEXENE CARBOXALDEHYDE īeaute Prestige International S.A.Dolce & Gabbana Light Blue Eau Intense Pour Homme (2017) smells every bit as I expected considering it is: A) Yet another flanker of a popular line the house seems intent on milking to death rather than put out something new B) Yet another phoned-in composition from one of the most-talented yet seemingly over-booked and under-utilized perfumers in the industry C) Yet another by-the-numbers aquatic in an ocean of such scents stretching all the way back to when Davidoff Cool Water (1988) set the standard.DIETHYLAMINO HYDROXYBENZOYL HEXYL BENZOATE.Base Notes: Musk wood - Incense - Oakmoss. Heart Notes: Rosemary - Szechuan pepper - Rosewood. Top Notes: Sicilian mandarin - Frozen grapefruit peel - Bergamot - Juniper. ![]() The perfume captures the fresh, spicy and sensual scents of the Mediterranean: which we feel is the perfect playground for seduction.” say Domenico Dolce and Stefano Gabbana. ![]() “Light Blue pour Homme is made for the Dolce & Gabbana man: sensual and modern, he likes to take care of himself, enhancing his healthy body with sports. Pure Mediterranean sensuality by Dolce & Gabbana.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |